Laura Plummer, 33, was jailed for three years on Boxing Day after being found to have illegally brought 290 Tramadol painkiller tablets in her suitcase into the country
A British woman jailed for taking illegal painkillers into Egypt is set to be released today in an ‘act of mercy’ by the country’s president.
Laura Plummer, 33, was jailed for three years on Boxing Day after being found to have brought 290 Tramadol tablets into the African country in her suitcase.
Today is Revolution Day in Egypt – a national public holiday – when the country’s president can issue pardons to prisoners.
Ms Plummer is on an official list of names waiting to be signed by Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, according to a source at the presidential office.
Once the decree is signed and sent to the country’s interior ministry she can be released.
Foreign Office officials have told Ms Plummer’s family that it is 95 per cent likely she will be released from her cell today, according to The Sun.
Open hearing that she was due to be let out, Ms Plummer said: ‘I never thought this day would come. I’d given up hope. It’s hard to believe and hasn’t sunk in yet.’
Ms Plummer’s family, who have described her as ‘naive’, said she was taking the tablets for her Egyptian partner Omar, who suffers from severe back pain.
Laura, a shop worker from Hull, East Yorkshire, is being held in horrendous conditions in a prison cell.
Her sister Jayne Synclair is praying Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi will use his authority to release Laura on the ‘day of mercy’.
Ms Plummer’s family, who have described Laura (right) as ‘naive’, said she was taking the tablets for her Egyptian partner Omar (left), who suffers from severe back pain
Ms Sinclair said the family have had no contact with Laura but have had an update from Omar which gave them small comfort. Pictured: Laura (right) with her two sisters
Laura’s family (pictured, including mother Roberta on the left) have repeatedly begged for clemency
President Sisi does not have the authority to interfere in Egypt’s judicial processes, but can issue pardons.
He has used this power on previous bank holidays to release a raft of prisoners.
Ms Synclair, speaking today, said: ‘We have a small hope. We are not building our hopes up but we put it through the press for him to consider.
‘He has previously said he won’t interfere in Laura’s case but we would love her to get pardoned.’
Her father Neville Plummer yesterday told the Mail: ‘It’s more than a ray of hope now, things are looking positive.
‘It seems as though there will be an official announcement on Saturday or Sunday, it’ll be all over the TV screens.’
He added: ‘It’s been such a horrendous time for us since October so we are not going to take it for granted, we will believe it when we see it, but it’s now looking positive.
‘We just want her back home with the family so we can begin our lives again.’
President Sisi pardoned 203 prisoners in March 2017 and over 500 in June in a presidential decree. Pictured: Laura before her ordeal
Pictured: Laura (left), her sisters and mother (right) enjoy a glass of wine in happier times
President Sisi pardoned 203 prisoners in March 2017 and over 500 in June in a presidential decree.
Sister Rachel Plummer said the family is still awaiting confirmation from the British Embassy in Egypt but were preparing to fly out to the country once they receive it.
She said: ‘We’re just waiting and hoping. This is a small ray of hope.’
Laura (pictured with boyfriend Omar) was reduced to tears during one visit after she was moved to a notorious prison in the country’s capital, Cairo
The country’s president authorises such pardons, which overrule judicial decisions, three or four times a year on major national holidays or major dates in the Egyptian calendar.
Yesterday marked the anniversary of the beginning of the Egyptian Revolution, a violent uprising which toppled then president Hosni Mubarak.
Clemency is often given to criminals who have served three-quarters or a considerable length of their sentence. But it can also be granted for foreigners being held.
Last year Mr el-Sisi pardoned 203 prisoners in March and more than 500 in June.
Miss Plummer is understood to be detained in Al-Qanatar female prison on the outskirts of Cairo.
Speaking to the Mail last month after Miss Plummer was jailed Mr Saad said he felt responsible for her plight.
He told the Mail: ‘My heart is absolutely broken – I’m missing her so much.
‘I did not want her to violate her life and I had no idea she would bring Tramadol – I would have told her “don’t bring it to Egypt”.’
He added he was continuing to campaign for her release.
Ms Plummer was taken to a Hurghada police cell before being taken to the notorious Qena prison after being sentenced, but it was decided there was no room for her and she spent a week back in Hurghada before being sent to a prison permanently in Cairo where conditions were reportedly better.
It emerged earlier this month that Ms Plummer had been transferred to the notorious jail in Cairo (pictured) to start her three-year-prison sentence
Two years ago Ms Plummer and Mr Azim had an Orfi marriage, which is not registered with the state but allows them to share a hotel room.
Despite already having a wife he has always said he also considers Miss Plummer his wife. Polygamy is legal for men in Egypt.
The pair met at the luxury Hilto Sharks Bay resort around four years ago in Sharm el Sheikh, when Ms Plummer was on holiday and where Mr Saad was a lifeguard. Since then she would visit Mr Saad three or four times a year.
Ms Plummer has always maintained she did not know Tramadol was banned in the country and obtained the drugs from a work colleague at the retail shop where she worked.
A Foreign Office spokesman said: ‘We continue to provide assistance to Laura and her family, and our embassy remains in regular contact with the Egyptian authorities.’
The prison was in a bad state of disrepair and the cells only have a small window giving contact with the outside world